The future of conservatism on the Court, a popular topic this past Term, continues to draw attention. Walter Russell Meads of The American Interest responds to Jeffrey Toobin’s New Yorker article on Justice Thomas (which Kiera covered in last week’s round-up); he characterizes the article as an announcement “to the liberal world that Clarence Thomas has morphed from a comic figure of fun to a determined super-villain who might reverse seventy years of liberal dominance of the federal bench and turn the clock back to 1930 if not 1789.†And writing at Dorf on Law, Michael Dorf suggests that Chamber of Commerce v. Whiting, in which the Court held that several provisions of an Arizona statute which permit the suspension or revocation of the business license of Arizona employers who knowingly and intentionally employ unauthorized aliens are not preempted by federal law, may signal the “the beginning of a larger political realignment†within conservatism toward a populist rather than pro-business position.
Also, SCOTUSblog’s symposium on same-sex marriage added four posts on Monday, from Andrew Koppelman of Northwestern University, Jana Singer of the University of Maryland, Robin Wilson of Washington and Lee University, and Dean Erwin Chemerinsky of the University of California, Irvine. The entire symposium can be found here.
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